
CWB Research
543 posts

CWB Research
@CWB_Research
Business & law grad. PM of student-led Richmond Capital Partners Sep 24’-Mar 25’; outperformed the S&P by over 3%. Not financial advice.


🔥 CPUs are having a moment. #Nvidia launched a standalone CPU. #Arm made its first chip in 35 years. #Intel & #AMD are raising prices amid a supply crunch. What's behind it: Agentic AI needs far more CPU than anyone planned for — driving a structural shift in CPU:GPU ratios toward 1:1. 💡More: buff.ly/Kl4Bcya 🔗









$AMD Valuation Step One: 2025 Financials Revenue: 34.6bn Date Center Rev: 16.6bn Gross Profit: 17.1bn Gross Margin: 49.4% OpEx: 13.5bn Operating Income: 3.7bn Operating Margin: 11% Step Two: Forward Assumptions Data center revenue, have 6 GW contract with Meta and OpenAI, each over a 5yr span and generating ~90bn in rev. That gives AMD 180bn in data center revenues by 2030, or 36bn a year. They have contracts for another 3 GW signed with Oracle, Cisco and Hewlett Packard and undisclosed contracts with Oracle + hyperscalers. Probably fair to bake in an additional 6 GW by 2030 (18 GW of hardware sold by 2030 total), so 270bn in data center revenue or 54bn annually + existing businesses roughly 20bn in client + gaming revenue and embedded (was 19bn in FY 2025). Overall we get to a spot where AMD rev will likely be 75bn annually by 2030. Step Three: Cost Assumptions Assume that gross margin remains constant at 50%. This brings AMD gross profit to 37.5bn in 2030. OpEx was 13.5bn in 2025, assume it grows to 20bn by 2030. This brings operating profit to 17.5bn. Step Four: EPS Valuation Shares outstanding could dilute 15% from OpenAI and Meta deals bringing total to 1.87bn S/O. EPS (17.5bn operating profit/1.87bn S/O) = 9.72. 20x multiple = $194 per share. Conclusion Stock currently trades at $206. Even with this revenue growth math doesn’t work, and it looks like $AMD is priced to perfection. Am I missing anything?

This move isn’t random. $ARM didn’t just launch a chip, it validated the shift: agentic AI = way more CPU demand. Not less. More orchestration > more memory handling > more sequencing.. That plays straight into $AMD. EPYC is already taking share and if workloads become CPU-heavy again AMD is the cleanest lever in public markets. Everyone’s framing ARM as a threat. I don’t see it that way (yet). Hyperscalers don’t pick one architecture, they scale both. ARM grows the pie, AMD monetizes it. And AMD isn’t standing still either. “Sound Wave” shows they’re hedging into ARM anyway. So you get: real growth (34%), real FCF, real share gains… without ARM’s execution risk. ARM is the story. AMD is the trade.










